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George Martinuzzi

George Martinuzzi, O.S.P. (born Juraj Utješenović, also known as György Martinuzzi,[4][5] Brother György,[4][5] Georg Utiessenovicz-Martinuzzi[citation needed] or György Fráter,[6] Hungarian: Fráter György; 1482 – 16 December 1551), was a Croatian nobleman, Pauline monk[7] and Hungarian statesman who supported King John Zápolya and his son, King John Sigismund Zápolya. He was Bishop of Nagyvárad (now Oradea), Archbishop of Esztergom and a cardinal.

His Excellency

George Martinuzzi
Archbishop of Esztergom
Portrait of Martinuzzi by unknown artist
ArchdioceseArchdiocese of Esztergom
Installed1551
Term ended1551
Orders
Ordination1510
Consecration1548[1]
by Franjo Jožefić (Bishop of Senj)[1]
Created cardinal12 October 1551
by Pope Julius III
Personal details
Born1482
Kamičak, Republic of Venice
(today Skradin area, Croatia)
Died16 December 1551
Nagycsanád, Eastern Hungarian Kingdom (now Cenad, Romania)
BuriedSt. Michael's Cathedral, Alba Iulia
NationalityVenetian
Croatian
Previous post(s)
Signature
Coat of arms

Name Edit

Since he usually identified himself as "Frater Georgius", he is known in Hungarian history as "Fráter György".

Early years Edit

Most details of Martinuzzi's life before 1528 are uncertain.[8] He was the youngest son of a Croatian lesser nobleman, Grgur Utješenović, and Anna Martinuzzi, who was descended from a Venetian patrician family.[9][10] He was born in Kamičak Castle, near Skradin, on 18 June 1482.[9][10] On the father's side, he is originating from a Hungarian noble family (Fráter from Dobra genus).[11] His grandfather was András Mátyok-Kézi.[12] He was still a child when his father and his two oldest brothers died and the Ottomans occupied the family estates.[13] Duke John Corvinus took care of the orphan in 1490.[14] Martinuzzi was sent to Corvin's castle at Hunyad (now Hunedoara in Romania).[14] He lived in wretched conditions for years, because young noblemen were intentionally treated like servants for pedagogical purposes.[15]

Martinuzzi moved to the court of Hedwig of Cieszyn in Szepes Castle (now Spiš Castle in Slovakia) around 1503.[16] She was the widow of his father's patron, Count Stephen Zápolya.[16] Initially, he served as a page, then he was made a guard of the palace.[9][17] He decided to abandon his military career and entered the Pauline Order at the age of 24.[18] He most probably settled in the Budaszentlőrinc Monastery where he learnt to read and write.[18] He was sent to continue his studies in the Jasna Góra Monastery in Częstochowa.[18] He was made the head of the monastery, according to unproved theories.[18] After he returned to Hungary in 1527, he became the prior of the Sajólád Monastery, which had recently received grants from the Zápolyas.[19]

Martinuzzi's sister, Ana, married Bartol Drašković and had three sons (one of whom was Croatian Ban (viceroy) and cardinal Juraj Drašković).

Political career Edit

John Zápolya's supporter Edit

The Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent annihilated the Hungarian royal army in the Battle of Mohács on 29 August 1526.[20] King Louis II of Hungary drowned in a stream fleeing from the battlefield.[20] The Diet of Hungary elected the wealthy Count John Zápolya—the son of Martinuzzi's patroness, Hedwig—king in November, but the most powerful barons ignored this decision and proclaimed Ferdinand of Habsburg the lawful monarch in December.[21] A civil war broke out and a supporter of Ferdinand, Gáspár Serédy, pillaged the Sajólád Monastery shortly before Martinuzzi returned to Hungary.[22]

Ferdinand's troops defeated John in the Battle of Szina (near present-day Seňa in Slovakia) on 8 March 1528.[23] John decided to flee to Poland and wanted to lodge a part of his wealth at the Sajólád Monastery.[24] Martinuzzi denied to store John's property, but he accompanied the king to Poland.[24] He acted as John's personal envoy and visited Hungary three times to convince the expelled king's supporters—including Stephen Báthory of Somlyó, Jakab Tornallyai and Pál Ártándy—to remain loyal to him.[25] Suleiman acknowledged John as the lawful king.[26] The sultan's support enabled him to return to Hungary and seize the eastern and central territories of the kingdom by the end of 1529,[26] but he could not reunite Hungary.[27]

Martinuzzi came back with John to Hungary, but the details of his life from 1529 to 1532 are unknown.[28] The king made Alvise Gritti—a Venetian adventurer who was the favourite of the Ottoman Grand Vizier, Pargalı Ibrahim Pasha—governor of Hungary.[29] Gritti appointed Martinuzzi the provisor of Buda Castle, entrusting him with the administration of the royal demesne in 1532.[28] Gritti's other henchman, János Dóczy, murdered the popular bishop of Várad (now Oradea in Romania), Imre Czibak, in August 1534.[30][31] The crime outraged the bishop's relatives and supporters who captured and killed Gritti on 28 September.[31] Martinuzzi did not lose the king's favor.[32] He succeeded Gritti as royal treasurer and the king also made him the new bishop of Várad.[31][32] The bishops of Várad were also the ispáns (or heads) of Bihar County.[32]

The consolidation of the royal treasury was Martinuzzi's principal task during the subsequent years.[32] He centralized the administration of royal revenues and secured the regular investigation of the tax collectors' activities.[32] Trading in leather, fleece, wine and grain became a significant source of income for the royal treasury in the late 1530s.[32] The strict control of state revenues caused many conflicts and Martinuzzi was often accused of greed.[32] Tamás Nádasdy deserted John Zápolya for Ferdinand of Habsburg after Martinuzzi deprived him of the administration of the salt mines in Máramaros County in 1534.[32]

The noblemen urged both kings to reach a compromise, because the civil war had caused much devastation in the whole kingdom.[33] John and Ferdinand's envoys started negotiations about the reunification of the country in 1534, but Martinuzzi was actually involved in the process only in 1536.[34] In this year, Ferdinand's emissary, Johann von Wese, noted that the "White Monk" (Martinuzzi) had taken full control of the negotiations.[35] Martinuzzi wanted to reach an agreement, but he could also prove himself determined to refute any compromise in order to strengthen John's position during the negotiations, especially after a new war broke out between Ferdinand's brother, Emperor Charles V, and King Francis I of France.[36] Wese personally came to Várad to meet with Martinuzzi and Franjo Frankopan in November 1537.[37] Martinuzzi hinted that he was willing to support Ferdinand and proudly claimed that he was the only politician to be able to mediate between the "Ottomans, Serbians, Moldavians, Wallachians and Hungarians", according to Wese's notes.[37] After a series of clandestine negotiations, they drafted an agreement on 24 February 1538.[37] The secret Treaty of Várad acknowledged the provisional division of Hungary between János and Ferdinand, but it also prescribed that the kingdom was to be reunited as soon as one of the two kings died.[33]

Both king signed the treaty, but they kept it in secret, because they knew that it could provoke an Ottoman invasion.[38] John soon realized that Ferdinand was unable to effectively support him against the Ottomans.[38] Martinuzzi started emphasizing that the treaty could be regarded valid only after the Diet enacted it and prevented the most powerful barons from confirming it.[39][40] He also urged the elderly John to marry Isabella Jagiellon, the daughter of King Sigismund I of Poland.[39] She was crowned queen in Székesfehérvár on 2 March 1539.[41] Pope Paul III confirmed Martinuzzi's appointment to the see of Várad in the same year, but Martinuzzi was not ordained bishop.[32]

The two voivodes (or royal governors) of Transylvania, Imre Balassa and István Majláth, concluded a secret agreement with the leading Transylvanian lords in December 1539.[40][42] They agreed to support each other and to coordinate their activities if the ailing king died, but their actual objectives are unclear.[43] The voivodes held a general assembly in Marosvásárhely (now Târgu Mureș in Romania) in March 1540.[44] The delegates accused Martinuzzi of tyranny, stating that his officials had levied arbitrary taxes and unlawfully forced the Transylvanian noblemen to contribute to the erection and maintenance of royal fortresses.[45] They summarized their grievances in a letter and urged the king to punish Martinuzzi.[45]

King John hurried to Transylvania and held a new assembly at Torda (now Turda in Romania) in April.[45] He stood by his treasurer, emphasizing that Martinuzzi had levied taxes to secure the paying of the annual tribute to the Ottoman Empire.[45] The king also pledged that the royal treasury would pay the tribute without collecting extraordinary taxes for two years.[45] The two voivodes' former supporters paid homage to the king and the general assembly sentenced Majláth to death for high treason in May.[45] Majláth fled to his castle at Fogaras (now Făgăraș in Romania) and the royal army could not capture the strong fortress.[40][45]

Ottoman conquest Edit

Queen Isabella gave birth to a son, John Sigismund, in Buda on 7 July.[40][46] King John was staying in Szászsebes (now Sebeș in Romania) when he learnt of his son's birth.[40][46] The celebrations put too much strain on the king who fell seriously ill.[40][46] He appointed his relative, Péter Petrovics, and Martinuzzi to be John Sigismund's guardians, emphasizing Martinuzzi's preeminent position.[46] Ignoring the provisions of the Treaty of Várad, the king also urged his supporters to elect the infant John Sigismund king after his death.[46][47] John soon lost consciousness and Martinuzzi sent envoys to Sigismund I of Poland and Suleiman, asking them to support John Sigismund.[48]

King John died on 22 July.[40] Franjo Frankopan, Péter Perényi, Ferenc Bebek, István Ráskay and Martinuzzi's other personal enemies informed Charles V that they were willing to support Ferdinand I to reunite Hungary if the emperor promised to provide military assistance to his brother against the Ottomans.[49] Martinuzzi and Bálint Török left Szászsebes for Buda, accompanied by 2000 troops.[50] Most of their retainers deserted, but Ferdinand's supporters could not prevent them from reaching the capital.[51] Martinuzzi had appointed Boldizsár Bornemissza to administer Transylvania, but Balassa and Majláth convened the general assembly of the Three Nations of Transylvania at Segesvár (now Sighișoara in Romania).[52] The delegates elected Balassa and Majláth the supreme commanders of the province.[52] They soon expelled Martinuzzi's troops from about 4 fortresses, including Görgény and Almás (now Gurghiu and Merișor in Romania).[52]

Martinuzzi hastily convened the Diet at Pest and persuaded the delegates to elect John Sigismund king in mid-September.[51][33] The Diet proclaimed Queen Isabella and Martinuzzi the king's guardians, but state administration was divided between Martinuzzi, Petrovics and Török.[51] After Martinuzzi garrisoned his own retainers in Buda Castle, gossips about his attempts to seize full control of the government were spreading in the queen's court.[51] He regularly checked queen's correspondence with her father, because he feared that Sigismund I of Poland could convince her to leave Hungary.[51]

The sultan's envoy, Çavuş Sinan, tried to persuade the delegates of the Three Nations to acknowledge Mailáth as the voivode of Transylvania at Berethalom (now Biertan in Romania) in September.[53] They resisted and decided to postpone Mailath's installation for five months.[53] Martinuzzi sent István Werbőczy to Istanbul to secure the sultan's support.[54] Suleiman decided to intervene in the conflict on behalf of the infant John Sigismund.[55] Ferdinand's envoys, Elek Thurzó and Ferenc Révay, came to Buda in October, but the queen did not abandon John Sigismund's claim to Hungary.[51] Martinuzzi also refuted to start secret negotiations with Thurzó and Révay in Visegrád.[51] Ferdinand's troops seized Visegrád, Vác, Tata, Székesfehérvár and Pest in October and November, but they could not capture Buda.[51] Martinuzzi again refused to negotiate with Ferdinand's envoys, stating that he was willing to obey only to a monarch who had been elected by common consent.[56]

Mehmed, the Ottoman governor of Belgrade, made a raid around Pest in March 1541.[57] Ferdinand's commander, Wilhelm von Roggendorf, laid siege to Buda in May.[56] Ferdinand's envoy, Niklas zu Salm, offered the region of Pressburg and Nagyszombat (now Bratislava and Trnava in Slovakia) to John Sigismund in return for Buda, but Martinuzzi refused.[58] Martinuzzi personally participated in the defense of Buda Castle when the besiegers made a sudden assault on 11 June.[59] Two days later, he ordered the persecution of a burgher who entered into secret negotiations with the besiegers about the surrender of the castle.[59]

John Zápolya named Martinuzzi and Péter Petrovics guardians of his infant son John II Sigismund, who was elected King of Hungary by the Diet (with Martinuzzi as regent). Martinuzzi frustrated attempts by dowager queen Isabella Jagiellon to promote Ferdinand; the latter, contending that John II's election had violated the treaty, invaded Hungary, and an Austrian army reached the walls of Buda in 1541.

Governor Edit

Martinuzzi took two drastic steps in response: he arrested the queen and appealed to the Ottoman Empire for help. John Zápolya had requested Ottoman aid against Ferdinand; in return, Hungary was an Ottoman vassal state, and Martinuzzi asked Ottoman Sultan Suleiman to defend his vassal against attack. An Ottoman army repulsed the Austrians.

On 28 August 1541 Martinuzzi, the queen, and the infant king went to the Ottoman camp, where he paid homage to the sultan as regent. During their absence, the Ottoman Grand Vizier seized Buda by subterfuge, causing Martinuzzi to realize the need for accords with Austria and the Ottoman Empire. This led to the 29 December 1541 Treaty of Gyalu, in which Ferdinand received western Hungary; the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom (an independent principality under Ottoman suzerainty) was reverted to John Sigismund. This region included many Hungarian counties on both sides of the Tisza and the city of Kassa (now Košice). Martinuzzi's policy was to keep the state neutral (and intact) by cultivating amicable relations with Austria without offending the Ottomans. Although this was difficult, it succeeded for a time.

Encouraged by Ferdinand's growing unpopularity (due to his inability to defend Hungary against the Turks), in 1545 Martinuzzi, to ensure John Sigismund's election as king, wanted to unite Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary and Eastern Hungarian Kingdom. Realizing that this was impossible, he aimed at an alliance with Ferdinand on terms of relative equality (a policy he followed until his death).

In 1550 Queen Isabella (who opposed Martinuzzi) complained about him to the Sultan, who ordered that Martinuzzi or his head be sent to Constantinople. A coalition formed against Martinuzzi composed of the queen, the hospodars of Moldavia and Wallachia, and the Turks. The regent imprisoned the queen in Gyulafehérvár (now Alba Iulia), drove the hospodars out of Transylvania, and defeated the Turks at Déva (now Deva). He compelled Isabella to accept terms with Ferdinand advantageous to her family and Transylvania, and placated the sultan with flattery and gifts. This agreement was confirmed by the diet of Kolozsvár (now Cluj-Napoca) in August 1551; Martinuzzi remained governor of Transylvania, and was ordained Archbishop of Esztergom. On 12 October 1551 Pope Julius III named him a cardinal, with permission to wear the habit of his order instead of a cardinal's robes.

Although Hungary was again reunited, Ferdinand's inability to defend it against the Ottomans forced Martinuzzi to resume the payment of tribute to the sultan in December 1551. However, the Ottomans no longer trusted a diplomat whose behavior they could not understand, and Ferdinand suspected him of wanting to secure Hungary for himself.

Death Edit

 
Utješenović's grave in Alba Iulia Cathedral
 
Martinuzzi's assassination, by agents of Giambattista Castaldo, on 16 December 1551

When the Ottomans seized Csanád (now Cenad) in 1551, Martinuzzi and imperial generals Giambattista Castaldo and Sforza-Pallavicini joined forces against a common foe. However, when Martinuzzi tried to mediate privately between the Ottomans and the Hungarians, Castaldo accused him of treason to Ferdinand and was given permission to kill him if needed. Martinuzzi's secretary, Marco Aurelio Ferrari, was the hired assassin. On 16 December 1551, at the Alvinc Castle, Ferrari stabbed Martinuzzi from behind while he was reading a letter. The cardinal (age 68) fought for his life, and was only killed with the aid of Pallavicini and a band of bravi. Ferdinand accepted responsibility for the murder, and the pope excommunicated him and his generals. After receiving an 87-article accusation of Martinuzzi for treason and hearing testimony from 116 witnesses, the pope exonerated Ferdinand and lifted the excommunications in 1555.[60]

Legacy Edit

A street in the old town Šibenik is named after Utješinović.

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Györgi Cardinal Martinuzzi, O.S.P.P.E. †, Catholic-hierarchy.org.
  2. ^ Fallenbüchl, p. 77
  3. ^ Barta, p. 253
  4. ^ a b Kontler 1999, p. 142.
  5. ^ a b Cartledge 2011, p. 84.
  6. ^ Molnár 2001, p. 91.
  7. ^ T. M. Lindsay: History of the Reformation: In Germany, Taylor & Francis, 1963 [1]
  8. ^ Oborni 2017, pp. 39–40.
  9. ^ a b c Markó 2006, p. 107.
  10. ^ a b Oborni 2017, p. 35.
  11. ^ "Fráter család. (Ippi, érkeserűi és bél-mezei). | Nagy Iván: Magyarország családai | Kézikönyvtár".
  12. ^ "András de Mátyok-Kezi's Family Tree".
  13. ^ Oborni 2017, p. 36.
  14. ^ a b Oborni 2017, p. 37.
  15. ^ Oborni 2017, pp. 37–38.
  16. ^ a b Oborni 2017, p. 38.
  17. ^ Oborni 2017, p. 39.
  18. ^ a b c d Oborni 2017, p. 40.
  19. ^ Oborni 2017, p. 41.
  20. ^ a b Molnár 2001, p. 85.
  21. ^ Molnár 2001, pp. 87–88.
  22. ^ Oborni 2017, pp. 40–41.
  23. ^ Barta 1994, p. 248.
  24. ^ a b Oborni 2017, p. 42.
  25. ^ Oborni 2017, pp. 42–44.
  26. ^ a b Barta 1994, p. 249.
  27. ^ Molnár 2001, p. 89.
  28. ^ a b Oborni 2017, p. 45.
  29. ^ Oborni 2017, pp. 45–46.
  30. ^ Oborni 2017, p. 47.
  31. ^ a b c Barta 1994, p. 250.
  32. ^ a b c d e f g h i Oborni 2017, p. 48.
  33. ^ a b c Cartledge 2011, p. 83.
  34. ^ Oborni 2017, pp. 51–53.
  35. ^ Oborni 2017, p. 53.
  36. ^ Oborni 2017, p. 54.
  37. ^ a b c Oborni 2017, p. 55.
  38. ^ a b Barta 1994, p. 251.
  39. ^ a b Oborni 2017, p. 59.
  40. ^ a b c d e f g Barta 1994, p. 252.
  41. ^ Oborni 2017, p. 62.
  42. ^ Oborni 2017, pp. 63–64.
  43. ^ Oborni 2017, p. 64.
  44. ^ Oborni 2017, pp. 64–65.
  45. ^ a b c d e f g Oborni 2017, p. 65.
  46. ^ a b c d e Oborni 2017, p. 67.
  47. ^ Molnár 2001, p. 88.
  48. ^ Oborni 2017, pp. 69–71.
  49. ^ Oborni 2017, p. 71.
  50. ^ Oborni 2017, p. 73.
  51. ^ a b c d e f g h Oborni 2017, p. 74.
  52. ^ a b c Oborni 2017, p. 77.
  53. ^ a b Oborni 2017, p. 78.
  54. ^ Barta 1994, p. 253.
  55. ^ Oborni 2017, p. 79.
  56. ^ a b Oborni 2017, p. 83.
  57. ^ Oborni 2017, p. 82.
  58. ^ Oborni 2017, pp. 83–84.
  59. ^ a b Oborni 2017, p. 84.
  60. ^ George Martinuzzi entry at the Catholic Encyclopedia

Sources Edit

  • Barta, Gábor (1994). "The Emergence of the Principality and its First Crises (1526–1606)". In Köpeczi, Béla; Barta, Gábor; Bóna, István; Makkai, László; Szász, Zoltán; Borus, Judit (eds.). History of Transylvania. Akadémiai Kiadó. pp. 247–300. ISBN 963-05-6703-2.
  • Cartledge, Bryan (2011). The Will to Survive: A History of Hungary. Hurst & Company. ISBN 978-184904-112-6.
  • Kontler, László (1999). Millennium in Central Europe: A History of Hungary. Atlantisz Publishing House. ISBN 963-9165-37-9.
  • Markó, László (2006). A magyar állam főméltóságai Szent Istvántól napjainkig: Életrajzi Lexikon [Great Officers of State in Hungary from King Saint Stephen to Our Days: A Biographical Encyclopedia] (in Hungarian). Helikon Kiadó. ISBN 963-547-085-1.
  • Molnár, Miklós (2001). A Concise History of Hungary. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-66736-4.
  • Oborni, Teréz (2017). Az ördöngős barát: Fráter György (1482–1551) [The Devilish Monk. Friar George (1482–1551)] (in Hungarian). Magyar Történelmi Társulat; Kronosz Kiadó. ISBN 978-963-467-001-8.
  • Constantin von Wurzbach: "Utiešenović, Georg". In: Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich. 49. Theil. Kaiserlich-königliche Hof- und Staatsdruckerei, Wien 1884, S. 160–162
  • István Torjai-Szabó, Martinuzzi, Georg, in: Biographisches Lexikon zur Geschichte Südosteuropas. Bd. 3. Hgg. Mathias Bernath / Felix von Schroeder. München 1979, S. 110-111 [Onlineausgabe];

Further reading Edit

  • A. Bechet, Histoire du ministére du cardinal Marlinusius (Paris, 1715);
  • Utješenović Ostrožinski, Ognjeslav (1881). Lebensgeschichte des Cardinals Georg Utiesenovic, Vienna
  • Codex epistolaris Fratris Georgii 1535-1551, ed. A. Krolyi (Budapest, 1881).
  • The most vivid presentation of Martinuzzi is to be found in M. Jókais' historical romance, Brother George (Hung.) (Budapest, 1893).

External links Edit

Political offices
Preceded by
Emeric Balassa of Gyarmat
Voivode of Transylvania
for Ferdinand I

1551
Succeeded by
Andrew Báthory of Ecsed

george, martinuzzi, born, juraj, utješenović, also, known, györgy, martinuzzi, brother, györgy, georg, utiessenovicz, martinuzzi, citation, needed, györgy, fráter, hungarian, fráter, györgy, 1482, december, 1551, croatian, nobleman, pauline, monk, hungarian, s. George Martinuzzi O S P born Juraj Utjesenovic also known as Gyorgy Martinuzzi 4 5 Brother Gyorgy 4 5 Georg Utiessenovicz Martinuzzi citation needed or Gyorgy Frater 6 Hungarian Frater Gyorgy 1482 16 December 1551 was a Croatian nobleman Pauline monk 7 and Hungarian statesman who supported King John Zapolya and his son King John Sigismund Zapolya He was Bishop of Nagyvarad now Oradea Archbishop of Esztergom and a cardinal His ExcellencyGeorge MartinuzziArchbishop of EsztergomPortrait of Martinuzzi by unknown artistArchdioceseArchdiocese of EsztergomInstalled1551Term ended1551OrdersOrdination1510Consecration1548 1 by Franjo Jozefic Bishop of Senj 1 Created cardinal12 October 1551by Pope Julius IIIPersonal detailsBorn1482Kamicak Republic of Venice today Skradin area Croatia Died16 December 1551Nagycsanad Eastern Hungarian Kingdom now Cenad Romania BuriedSt Michael s Cathedral Alba IuliaNationalityVenetianCroatianPrevious post s Bishop of Nagyvarad 1534 51 Voivode of Transylvania 1551 2 3 SignatureCoat of arms Contents 1 Name 2 Early years 3 Political career 3 1 John Zapolya s supporter 3 2 Ottoman conquest 3 3 Governor 4 Death 5 Legacy 6 References 7 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksName EditSince he usually identified himself as Frater Georgius he is known in Hungarian history as Frater Gyorgy Early years EditMost details of Martinuzzi s life before 1528 are uncertain 8 He was the youngest son of a Croatian lesser nobleman Grgur Utjesenovic and Anna Martinuzzi who was descended from a Venetian patrician family 9 10 He was born in Kamicak Castle near Skradin on 18 June 1482 9 10 On the father s side he is originating from a Hungarian noble family Frater from Dobra genus 11 His grandfather was Andras Matyok Kezi 12 He was still a child when his father and his two oldest brothers died and the Ottomans occupied the family estates 13 Duke John Corvinus took care of the orphan in 1490 14 Martinuzzi was sent to Corvin s castle at Hunyad now Hunedoara in Romania 14 He lived in wretched conditions for years because young noblemen were intentionally treated like servants for pedagogical purposes 15 Martinuzzi moved to the court of Hedwig of Cieszyn in Szepes Castle now Spis Castle in Slovakia around 1503 16 She was the widow of his father s patron Count Stephen Zapolya 16 Initially he served as a page then he was made a guard of the palace 9 17 He decided to abandon his military career and entered the Pauline Order at the age of 24 18 He most probably settled in the Budaszentlorinc Monastery where he learnt to read and write 18 He was sent to continue his studies in the Jasna Gora Monastery in Czestochowa 18 He was made the head of the monastery according to unproved theories 18 After he returned to Hungary in 1527 he became the prior of the Sajolad Monastery which had recently received grants from the Zapolyas 19 Martinuzzi s sister Ana married Bartol Draskovic and had three sons one of whom was Croatian Ban viceroy and cardinal Juraj Draskovic Political career EditJohn Zapolya s supporter Edit The Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent annihilated the Hungarian royal army in the Battle of Mohacs on 29 August 1526 20 King Louis II of Hungary drowned in a stream fleeing from the battlefield 20 The Diet of Hungary elected the wealthy Count John Zapolya the son of Martinuzzi s patroness Hedwig king in November but the most powerful barons ignored this decision and proclaimed Ferdinand of Habsburg the lawful monarch in December 21 A civil war broke out and a supporter of Ferdinand Gaspar Seredy pillaged the Sajolad Monastery shortly before Martinuzzi returned to Hungary 22 Ferdinand s troops defeated John in the Battle of Szina near present day Sena in Slovakia on 8 March 1528 23 John decided to flee to Poland and wanted to lodge a part of his wealth at the Sajolad Monastery 24 Martinuzzi denied to store John s property but he accompanied the king to Poland 24 He acted as John s personal envoy and visited Hungary three times to convince the expelled king s supporters including Stephen Bathory of Somlyo Jakab Tornallyai and Pal Artandy to remain loyal to him 25 Suleiman acknowledged John as the lawful king 26 The sultan s support enabled him to return to Hungary and seize the eastern and central territories of the kingdom by the end of 1529 26 but he could not reunite Hungary 27 Martinuzzi came back with John to Hungary but the details of his life from 1529 to 1532 are unknown 28 The king made Alvise Gritti a Venetian adventurer who was the favourite of the Ottoman Grand Vizier Pargali Ibrahim Pasha governor of Hungary 29 Gritti appointed Martinuzzi the provisor of Buda Castle entrusting him with the administration of the royal demesne in 1532 28 Gritti s other henchman Janos Doczy murdered the popular bishop of Varad now Oradea in Romania Imre Czibak in August 1534 30 31 The crime outraged the bishop s relatives and supporters who captured and killed Gritti on 28 September 31 Martinuzzi did not lose the king s favor 32 He succeeded Gritti as royal treasurer and the king also made him the new bishop of Varad 31 32 The bishops of Varad were also the ispans or heads of Bihar County 32 The consolidation of the royal treasury was Martinuzzi s principal task during the subsequent years 32 He centralized the administration of royal revenues and secured the regular investigation of the tax collectors activities 32 Trading in leather fleece wine and grain became a significant source of income for the royal treasury in the late 1530s 32 The strict control of state revenues caused many conflicts and Martinuzzi was often accused of greed 32 Tamas Nadasdy deserted John Zapolya for Ferdinand of Habsburg after Martinuzzi deprived him of the administration of the salt mines in Maramaros County in 1534 32 The noblemen urged both kings to reach a compromise because the civil war had caused much devastation in the whole kingdom 33 John and Ferdinand s envoys started negotiations about the reunification of the country in 1534 but Martinuzzi was actually involved in the process only in 1536 34 In this year Ferdinand s emissary Johann von Wese noted that the White Monk Martinuzzi had taken full control of the negotiations 35 Martinuzzi wanted to reach an agreement but he could also prove himself determined to refute any compromise in order to strengthen John s position during the negotiations especially after a new war broke out between Ferdinand s brother Emperor Charles V and King Francis I of France 36 Wese personally came to Varad to meet with Martinuzzi and Franjo Frankopan in November 1537 37 Martinuzzi hinted that he was willing to support Ferdinand and proudly claimed that he was the only politician to be able to mediate between the Ottomans Serbians Moldavians Wallachians and Hungarians according to Wese s notes 37 After a series of clandestine negotiations they drafted an agreement on 24 February 1538 37 The secret Treaty of Varad acknowledged the provisional division of Hungary between Janos and Ferdinand but it also prescribed that the kingdom was to be reunited as soon as one of the two kings died 33 Both king signed the treaty but they kept it in secret because they knew that it could provoke an Ottoman invasion 38 John soon realized that Ferdinand was unable to effectively support him against the Ottomans 38 Martinuzzi started emphasizing that the treaty could be regarded valid only after the Diet enacted it and prevented the most powerful barons from confirming it 39 40 He also urged the elderly John to marry Isabella Jagiellon the daughter of King Sigismund I of Poland 39 She was crowned queen in Szekesfehervar on 2 March 1539 41 Pope Paul III confirmed Martinuzzi s appointment to the see of Varad in the same year but Martinuzzi was not ordained bishop 32 The two voivodes or royal governors of Transylvania Imre Balassa and Istvan Majlath concluded a secret agreement with the leading Transylvanian lords in December 1539 40 42 They agreed to support each other and to coordinate their activities if the ailing king died but their actual objectives are unclear 43 The voivodes held a general assembly in Marosvasarhely now Targu Mureș in Romania in March 1540 44 The delegates accused Martinuzzi of tyranny stating that his officials had levied arbitrary taxes and unlawfully forced the Transylvanian noblemen to contribute to the erection and maintenance of royal fortresses 45 They summarized their grievances in a letter and urged the king to punish Martinuzzi 45 King John hurried to Transylvania and held a new assembly at Torda now Turda in Romania in April 45 He stood by his treasurer emphasizing that Martinuzzi had levied taxes to secure the paying of the annual tribute to the Ottoman Empire 45 The king also pledged that the royal treasury would pay the tribute without collecting extraordinary taxes for two years 45 The two voivodes former supporters paid homage to the king and the general assembly sentenced Majlath to death for high treason in May 45 Majlath fled to his castle at Fogaras now Făgăraș in Romania and the royal army could not capture the strong fortress 40 45 Ottoman conquest Edit Queen Isabella gave birth to a son John Sigismund in Buda on 7 July 40 46 King John was staying in Szaszsebes now Sebeș in Romania when he learnt of his son s birth 40 46 The celebrations put too much strain on the king who fell seriously ill 40 46 He appointed his relative Peter Petrovics and Martinuzzi to be John Sigismund s guardians emphasizing Martinuzzi s preeminent position 46 Ignoring the provisions of the Treaty of Varad the king also urged his supporters to elect the infant John Sigismund king after his death 46 47 John soon lost consciousness and Martinuzzi sent envoys to Sigismund I of Poland and Suleiman asking them to support John Sigismund 48 King John died on 22 July 40 Franjo Frankopan Peter Perenyi Ferenc Bebek Istvan Raskay and Martinuzzi s other personal enemies informed Charles V that they were willing to support Ferdinand I to reunite Hungary if the emperor promised to provide military assistance to his brother against the Ottomans 49 Martinuzzi and Balint Torok left Szaszsebes for Buda accompanied by 2000 troops 50 Most of their retainers deserted but Ferdinand s supporters could not prevent them from reaching the capital 51 Martinuzzi had appointed Boldizsar Bornemissza to administer Transylvania but Balassa and Majlath convened the general assembly of the Three Nations of Transylvania at Segesvar now Sighișoara in Romania 52 The delegates elected Balassa and Majlath the supreme commanders of the province 52 They soon expelled Martinuzzi s troops from about 4 fortresses including Gorgeny and Almas now Gurghiu and Merișor in Romania 52 Martinuzzi hastily convened the Diet at Pest and persuaded the delegates to elect John Sigismund king in mid September 51 33 The Diet proclaimed Queen Isabella and Martinuzzi the king s guardians but state administration was divided between Martinuzzi Petrovics and Torok 51 After Martinuzzi garrisoned his own retainers in Buda Castle gossips about his attempts to seize full control of the government were spreading in the queen s court 51 He regularly checked queen s correspondence with her father because he feared that Sigismund I of Poland could convince her to leave Hungary 51 The sultan s envoy Cavus Sinan tried to persuade the delegates of the Three Nations to acknowledge Mailath as the voivode of Transylvania at Berethalom now Biertan in Romania in September 53 They resisted and decided to postpone Mailath s installation for five months 53 Martinuzzi sent Istvan Werboczy to Istanbul to secure the sultan s support 54 Suleiman decided to intervene in the conflict on behalf of the infant John Sigismund 55 Ferdinand s envoys Elek Thurzo and Ferenc Revay came to Buda in October but the queen did not abandon John Sigismund s claim to Hungary 51 Martinuzzi also refuted to start secret negotiations with Thurzo and Revay in Visegrad 51 Ferdinand s troops seized Visegrad Vac Tata Szekesfehervar and Pest in October and November but they could not capture Buda 51 Martinuzzi again refused to negotiate with Ferdinand s envoys stating that he was willing to obey only to a monarch who had been elected by common consent 56 Mehmed the Ottoman governor of Belgrade made a raid around Pest in March 1541 57 Ferdinand s commander Wilhelm von Roggendorf laid siege to Buda in May 56 Ferdinand s envoy Niklas zu Salm offered the region of Pressburg and Nagyszombat now Bratislava and Trnava in Slovakia to John Sigismund in return for Buda but Martinuzzi refused 58 Martinuzzi personally participated in the defense of Buda Castle when the besiegers made a sudden assault on 11 June 59 Two days later he ordered the persecution of a burgher who entered into secret negotiations with the besiegers about the surrender of the castle 59 John Zapolya named Martinuzzi and Peter Petrovics guardians of his infant son John II Sigismund who was elected King of Hungary by the Diet with Martinuzzi as regent Martinuzzi frustrated attempts by dowager queen Isabella Jagiellon to promote Ferdinand the latter contending that John II s election had violated the treaty invaded Hungary and an Austrian army reached the walls of Buda in 1541 Governor Edit Further information Eastern Hungarian Kingdom Martinuzzi took two drastic steps in response he arrested the queen and appealed to the Ottoman Empire for help John Zapolya had requested Ottoman aid against Ferdinand in return Hungary was an Ottoman vassal state and Martinuzzi asked Ottoman Sultan Suleiman to defend his vassal against attack An Ottoman army repulsed the Austrians On 28 August 1541 Martinuzzi the queen and the infant king went to the Ottoman camp where he paid homage to the sultan as regent During their absence the Ottoman Grand Vizier seized Buda by subterfuge causing Martinuzzi to realize the need for accords with Austria and the Ottoman Empire This led to the 29 December 1541 Treaty of Gyalu in which Ferdinand received western Hungary the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom an independent principality under Ottoman suzerainty was reverted to John Sigismund This region included many Hungarian counties on both sides of the Tisza and the city of Kassa now Kosice Martinuzzi s policy was to keep the state neutral and intact by cultivating amicable relations with Austria without offending the Ottomans Although this was difficult it succeeded for a time Encouraged by Ferdinand s growing unpopularity due to his inability to defend Hungary against the Turks in 1545 Martinuzzi to ensure John Sigismund s election as king wanted to unite Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary and Eastern Hungarian Kingdom Realizing that this was impossible he aimed at an alliance with Ferdinand on terms of relative equality a policy he followed until his death In 1550 Queen Isabella who opposed Martinuzzi complained about him to the Sultan who ordered that Martinuzzi or his head be sent to Constantinople A coalition formed against Martinuzzi composed of the queen the hospodars of Moldavia and Wallachia and the Turks The regent imprisoned the queen in Gyulafehervar now Alba Iulia drove the hospodars out of Transylvania and defeated the Turks at Deva now Deva He compelled Isabella to accept terms with Ferdinand advantageous to her family and Transylvania and placated the sultan with flattery and gifts This agreement was confirmed by the diet of Kolozsvar now Cluj Napoca in August 1551 Martinuzzi remained governor of Transylvania and was ordained Archbishop of Esztergom On 12 October 1551 Pope Julius III named him a cardinal with permission to wear the habit of his order instead of a cardinal s robes Although Hungary was again reunited Ferdinand s inability to defend it against the Ottomans forced Martinuzzi to resume the payment of tribute to the sultan in December 1551 However the Ottomans no longer trusted a diplomat whose behavior they could not understand and Ferdinand suspected him of wanting to secure Hungary for himself Death Edit nbsp Utjesenovic s grave in Alba Iulia Cathedral nbsp Martinuzzi s assassination by agents of Giambattista Castaldo on 16 December 1551When the Ottomans seized Csanad now Cenad in 1551 Martinuzzi and imperial generals Giambattista Castaldo and Sforza Pallavicini joined forces against a common foe However when Martinuzzi tried to mediate privately between the Ottomans and the Hungarians Castaldo accused him of treason to Ferdinand and was given permission to kill him if needed Martinuzzi s secretary Marco Aurelio Ferrari was the hired assassin On 16 December 1551 at the Alvinc Castle Ferrari stabbed Martinuzzi from behind while he was reading a letter The cardinal age 68 fought for his life and was only killed with the aid of Pallavicini and a band of bravi Ferdinand accepted responsibility for the murder and the pope excommunicated him and his generals After receiving an 87 article accusation of Martinuzzi for treason and hearing testimony from 116 witnesses the pope exonerated Ferdinand and lifted the excommunications in 1555 60 Legacy EditA street in the old town Sibenik is named after Utjesinovic References Edit a b Gyorgi Cardinal Martinuzzi O S P P E Catholic hierarchy org Fallenbuchl p 77 Barta p 253 a b Kontler 1999 p 142 a b Cartledge 2011 p 84 Molnar 2001 p 91 T M Lindsay History of the Reformation In Germany Taylor amp Francis 1963 1 Oborni 2017 pp 39 40 a b c Marko 2006 p 107 a b Oborni 2017 p 35 Frater csalad Ippi erkeserui es bel mezei Nagy Ivan Magyarorszag csaladai Kezikonyvtar Andras de Matyok Kezi s Family Tree Oborni 2017 p 36 a b Oborni 2017 p 37 Oborni 2017 pp 37 38 a b Oborni 2017 p 38 Oborni 2017 p 39 a b c d Oborni 2017 p 40 Oborni 2017 p 41 a b Molnar 2001 p 85 Molnar 2001 pp 87 88 Oborni 2017 pp 40 41 Barta 1994 p 248 a b Oborni 2017 p 42 Oborni 2017 pp 42 44 a b Barta 1994 p 249 Molnar 2001 p 89 a b Oborni 2017 p 45 Oborni 2017 pp 45 46 Oborni 2017 p 47 a b c Barta 1994 p 250 a b c d e f g h i Oborni 2017 p 48 a b c Cartledge 2011 p 83 Oborni 2017 pp 51 53 Oborni 2017 p 53 Oborni 2017 p 54 a b c Oborni 2017 p 55 a b Barta 1994 p 251 a b Oborni 2017 p 59 a b c d e f g Barta 1994 p 252 Oborni 2017 p 62 Oborni 2017 pp 63 64 Oborni 2017 p 64 Oborni 2017 pp 64 65 a b c d e f g Oborni 2017 p 65 a b c d e Oborni 2017 p 67 Molnar 2001 p 88 Oborni 2017 pp 69 71 Oborni 2017 p 71 Oborni 2017 p 73 a b c d e f g h Oborni 2017 p 74 a b c Oborni 2017 p 77 a b Oborni 2017 p 78 Barta 1994 p 253 Oborni 2017 p 79 a b Oborni 2017 p 83 Oborni 2017 p 82 Oborni 2017 pp 83 84 a b Oborni 2017 p 84 George Martinuzzi entry at the Catholic EncyclopediaSources EditBarta Gabor 1994 The Emergence of the Principality and its First Crises 1526 1606 In Kopeczi Bela Barta Gabor Bona Istvan Makkai Laszlo Szasz Zoltan Borus Judit eds History of Transylvania Akademiai Kiado pp 247 300 ISBN 963 05 6703 2 Cartledge Bryan 2011 The Will to Survive A History of Hungary Hurst amp Company ISBN 978 184904 112 6 Kontler Laszlo 1999 Millennium in Central Europe A History of Hungary Atlantisz Publishing House ISBN 963 9165 37 9 Marko Laszlo 2006 A magyar allam fomeltosagai Szent Istvantol napjainkig Eletrajzi Lexikon Great Officers of State in Hungary from King Saint Stephen to Our Days A Biographical Encyclopedia in Hungarian Helikon Kiado ISBN 963 547 085 1 Molnar Miklos 2001 A Concise History of Hungary Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 66736 4 Oborni Terez 2017 Az ordongos barat Frater Gyorgy 1482 1551 The Devilish Monk Friar George 1482 1551 in Hungarian Magyar Tortenelmi Tarsulat Kronosz Kiado ISBN 978 963 467 001 8 Constantin von Wurzbach Utiesenovic Georg In Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich 49 Theil Kaiserlich konigliche Hof und Staatsdruckerei Wien 1884 S 160 162 Istvan Torjai Szabo Martinuzzi Georg in Biographisches Lexikon zur Geschichte Sudosteuropas Bd 3 Hgg Mathias Bernath Felix von Schroeder Munchen 1979 S 110 111 Onlineausgabe Further reading EditA Bechet Histoire du ministere du cardinal Marlinusius Paris 1715 Utjesenovic Ostrozinski Ognjeslav 1881 Lebensgeschichte des Cardinals Georg Utiesenovic Vienna Codex epistolaris Fratris Georgii 1535 1551 ed A Krolyi Budapest 1881 The most vivid presentation of Martinuzzi is to be found in M Jokais historical romance Brother George Hung Budapest 1893 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Martinuzzi Bain Robert Nisbet 1911 Martinuzzi George In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 803 George Martinuzzi entry at the Catholic Encyclopedia Juraj Utjesinovic Martinusic cardinal from Croatia was born in KamicakPolitical officesPreceded byEmeric Balassa of Gyarmat Voivode of Transylvaniafor Ferdinand I1551 Succeeded byAndrew Bathory of Ecsed Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Martinuzzi amp oldid 1163263083, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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